Texarkana Gazette

Turkey’s president calls anti-war students ‘terrorists’

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ISTANBUL—Turkey’s president on Saturday criticized anti-war students at a top university, calling them “terrorists” and promising to oust them from their studies.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said “communist, traitor youth” tried to mess up a student stand opened by “religious, nationalis­t, local youth” at the public Bogazici University.

Speaking in northern Samsun province, Erdogan announced an investigat­ion and said “we won’t give these terrorist youth the right to study at these universiti­es.”

On Monday, students opened a stand distributi­ng sweets dubbed “Afrin delight” to commemorat­e fallen soldiers in Turkey’s cross-border operation in Syria.

Another group protested against them, holding anti-war banners and chanting slogans such as “the palace wants war, people want peace,” in reference to Erdogan’s presidenti­al complex.

The school week was tense with heavy police presence in the university. Turkey’s official Anadolu Agency said five people suspected of having attacked the student stand were detained. On Thursday, police detained seven others during a protest. A video showed plaincloth­es police officers dragging a young man.

Turkey launched a cross-border military offensive on Jan. 20 to oust Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units of YPG from Afrin in northweste­rn Syria. Turkey considers the YPG a terror group and an extension of Kurdish militants waging an insurgency within its own borders.

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